Native America Calling: Tribes look to modernize the traditional practice of banishment [today]

Here.

Blurb:

The Gila River Indian Community in Arizona is considering a new law to banish tribal members convicted of violent crimes. A bill awaits a signature from the New York governor that aims to strengthen the Seneca Nation’s ability to enforce tribal laws, which includes removing people convicted of drug trafficking and other crimes. Those are among efforts by tribes to formalize the traditional practice of banishment as tool to combat crime, but such efforts sometimes conflict with modern legal systems. In Alaska, the Native Village of Togiak faces a legal challenge after tribal members forced a man suspected of illicit alcohol sales onto an airplane to another city. We’ll get insights from tribal leaders and Native legal experts on how banishment fits in with modern justice.

New York Federal Court Allows ICRA Habeas Petitions to Move Forward in Cayuga Banishments

Here are the available materials in Parker v. Halftown (N.D. N.Y.):

Oklahoma Federal Court Orders Exhaustion in Challenge to Seneca-Cayuga Banishments

Here are the materials in Channing v. Seneca-Cayuga Nation (N.D. Okla.):

The complaint is here.

Seneca-Cayuga Sued for Political Banishments

Here are the materials so far in Channing v. Seneca-Cayuga Nation (N.D. Okla.):

2 Complaint

8-1 Bill Fisher Dec

Tohono O’odham Court of Appeals Finds Constitutional Waiver of Immunity in Banishment Suit

Downloads(PDF):

Recent Native America Calling Shows on Tribal Member Disenrollments, Blood Quantum, and Banishment

Here:

http://nativeamericacalling.com/tuesday-may-5-2015-banishment-good-or-bad-for-tribal-communities/

http://nativeamericacalling.com/wednesday-may-6-2015-tribal-enrollment-and-blood-quantum/

News Coverage of Drug-Related Banishments by Saginaw Chippewa

Here is “Traffic stop leads to heroin arrest.”

And:”Two banished from Isabella Reservation before their day in court.”

The tribe’s press release is here. The text:

The Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribal Council has taken a bold and proactive position today to assert Tribal sovereignty on their War on Drugs.  Unanimous votes were cast today during a work session of the Tribal Council for the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe to exclude or banish two non-member Native American’s for their involvement in drug trafficking within the boundaries of the Isabella Federal Reservation.

 

“Today our people have shown that we are no longer going to tolerate people who peddle unhealthy and life destroying substances onto the reservation. Today we took necessary steps to protect and uphold our members and their families against this plague called addiction”, stated Tribal Chief Steve Pego. 

 

A routine traffic stop in Mt. Pleasant late Tuesday night, February 17, 2015, ended in a drug bust and the arrest of one woman on charges of possession of heroin and intent to deliver and another woman for carrying concealed weapons.  “These are not the type of people we want in our community”, stated Tribal Sub Chief, Lorna Kahgegab Call. 

 

Tribal Council under Ordinance No.3 of the Tribal Code can exclude individuals from their territories for specific reasons.  “The choice to exclude these individuals before conviction is our way of sending the message that this will not be tolerated in our community”, stated Tribal Police Captain Jim Cates.   

New Student Scholarship on Federal Court Jurisdiction over Tribal Banishments

Mary Swift has published “Banishing Habeas Jurisdiction: Why Federal Courts Lack Jurisdiction to Hear Tribal Banishment Actions” in the Washington Law Review. The article is available on SSRN here.

Here is the abstract:

The Indian Civil Rights Act (ICRA or ‘the Act’) of 1968 grants members of federally recognized Indian tribes individual civil rights similar to those enumerated in the federal Bill of Rights and Fourteenth Amendment. However, the Act provides only one explicit federal remedy for violations of the rights secured therein: the writ of habeas corpus. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to read an implied cause of action into the Act. Some federal courts assert habeas jurisdiction to review tribal banishment actions alleged to violate ICRA, but not over disenrollment actions. Tribal banishment means an individual tribal member is cast out from tribal lands and often removed from tribal membership rolls. Tribal disenrollment means an individual tribal member is removed from tribal membership rolls and often denied access to some or all tribal facilities. This Comment argues that federal courts should not assert habeas jurisdiction over tribal banishment actions because: exercising habeas jurisdiction over tribal banishment actions contravenes federal Indian law canons of construction; expansive habeas jurisdiction disturbs the careful balance struck by Congress and the Court between individual rights and tribal sovereignty; declining jurisdiction protects tribes’ sovereign authority to determine their own membership; and the line between banishment and disenrollment is arbitrary because tribes have authority to exclude nonmembers from tribal lands. Though it may leave a few individual tribal members without a remedy to challenge tribal banishment alleged to violate ICRA, such a uniform rule best protects tribal sovereignty, preserves congressional intent, and promotes robust tribal court systems.

Banishments at Mashantucket Pequot

From local news:

In banishing Christopher Pearson, the former tribal official facing sentencing on federal wire-fraud charges, the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Elders Council meted out an ancient form of punishment employed by Indian tribes across the country.

Within weeks of his Nov. 19 conviction in U.S. District Court in Hartford, Pearson was ordered off the Mashantucket reservation, where he owns a home, and to surrender his tribal badge, having “forfeited all rights and privileges of Tribal membership with the exception of services provided by Tribal Health Services.”

The elders council also directed the tribe’s finance department to cut off Pearson’s monthly “incentive” payments — the distributions of Foxwoods Resort Casino revenue that all tribal members in good standing receive.

While the tribe would provide no information about banishments, it’s believed that their frequency has increased since the tribe’s constitution and by-laws granted the elders council “the authority and responsibility” to impose them.

Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Council resolutions show that 12 people were banished by the tribal council prior to the establishment of the elders council in 1996. Currently, several people are banished each year, maybe more, according to Thomas Weissmuller, chief judge of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Court. Continue reading